(no subject)
22 May 2020 03:03I didn't log on to write 3am liturgy but this show really speaks go me ok. I log on to write a joke.
So I'm watching Robin of Sherwood, and hers a lot of stuff in there thst one could potentially adapt for one's own rites; and at the same time, they take their magic v seriously like I recognise some obscure god names and stuff, not the normal Hollywood mumbo jumbo. We get to the episode about the 7 named swords and a ritual idea just jumps out at me, states me in the face.
Brilliant! Brilliant!
So I do some googleage, reasoning that a cult 70s show will have a good fan wiki, so I can get a list of the names of the swords. It does. In fact, it goes on to explain they are real and listed in the Key of Solomon, a real medieval grimoires. So, this means two things. The first is that I can't chuck them into my occult mix without doing some actual due diligence first.
And the second is - as I was beginning to suspect - Richard Carpenter is actually a wizard. I can't tell you how hard it would be to get a copy of the actual Lemegeton in 1981. The man writes about both paganism and the occult in a way which is - not historically accursed, I suppose, but I recognise the books he was reading a lot of the time, you know? This is not idle research for flavour. Man knows his stuff. Delightful.
So I'm watching Robin of Sherwood, and hers a lot of stuff in there thst one could potentially adapt for one's own rites; and at the same time, they take their magic v seriously like I recognise some obscure god names and stuff, not the normal Hollywood mumbo jumbo. We get to the episode about the 7 named swords and a ritual idea just jumps out at me, states me in the face.
Brilliant! Brilliant!
So I do some googleage, reasoning that a cult 70s show will have a good fan wiki, so I can get a list of the names of the swords. It does. In fact, it goes on to explain they are real and listed in the Key of Solomon, a real medieval grimoires. So, this means two things. The first is that I can't chuck them into my occult mix without doing some actual due diligence first.
And the second is - as I was beginning to suspect - Richard Carpenter is actually a wizard. I can't tell you how hard it would be to get a copy of the actual Lemegeton in 1981. The man writes about both paganism and the occult in a way which is - not historically accursed, I suppose, but I recognise the books he was reading a lot of the time, you know? This is not idle research for flavour. Man knows his stuff. Delightful.
no subject
Date: 22 May 2020 04:02 (UTC)and, according to Steven Posch, Carpenter was a pagan.
https://witchesandpagans.com/pagan-culture-blogs/paganistan/robin-of-sherwood-an-appreciation.html#comments